KALTUNGO, Nigeria (AP) — The 9-month-old twins cried nonstop and tugged at their mother, seeking attention but also food. They had received little in the past 24 hours, and there were signs of deeper hunger in the heads too big for their tiny bodies.

Climate change and armed conflict have been identified as the primary drivers for rising food insecurity in several countries. Mali, the Gaza Strip, Sudan and South Sudan have are all at "the highest level of concern", according to the U.N.'s Food and Agriculture Organization. A document by the Food and Agriculture Organization and World Food Programme, released on Wednesday, also added Haiti to the list.

"Not much milk comes out," said their 38-year-old mother, Dorcas Simon, who struggles to breastfeed and has three other children. She laughed, as if to conceal the pain. "What will I give them when I don't have food myself?"

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